Dad Mike, who's seen Todd some 60 times, and mom Donna made Rundgren's "Mated" their wedding song — after rocker Todd had wowed dad with his devilish diversity by doing the Broadway tune, "Something's Coming," from "West Side Story." Daughter Jeanette, 20, remembers that Todd tunes were her lullabies. As for youngest daughter, Jessica, 16?

"He's just awesome. Especially the lyric, "Eyes that have seen/Will know what I mean."

But really, guys, what makes Todd Rundgren so special that you made the show a family outing?

"He can do everything, from metal to softer melodic stuff," said Jeanette before the Perks snared standing room next to the stage. "And he's a crowd pleaser."

Rundgren and his hot four-piece rock band did it all during his two-hour set that was book-ended by chestnuts like "Open My Eyes" and "Couldn't I Just Tell You." But the centerpiece was his new, unreleased album, "Arena," which features the latest surprise from the former Town of Woodstock resident who's made a career of surprising: arena rock. Rundgren, 60, played the whole thing — about 75 minutes — straight through.

Amazingly, he managed to integrate most of the ingredients of his four-decade career — from tasty melodies to stick-to-your-ribs guitar riffs — into big songs that packed enough punch to slay a stadium, let alone this theater, which is smaller than a school auditorium. And he did it with typical Todd tongue-in-cheek humor, taking a style he could have parodied and turning it into a fist-pumping, crowd-chanting rock concert.

"One of the keys to arena rock is find your hook and hammer it home," he explained. So even though the new tunes with names like "Mad" pounded and rocked with the ferocity of one of Todd's windmill guitar attacks, they were, at their core, as melodic as a hit like "I Saw the Light."

All of which thrilled the crowd of cheering fans, including the Perks.

"Just great," said Mike, as mom and the kids stood in front of a sweaty Todd and rocked.